Peru election: Humala-Fujimori run-off set for 5 June
- Published
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Ollanta Humala has been likened to Venezuela's left-wing President Hugo Chavez
Peru's presidential election will go to a second round on 5 June, pitting former army officer Ollanta Humala against Keiko Fujimori, daughter of disgraced ex-leader Alberto Fujimori.
No candidate received the 50% needed to secure victory outright in the first round on Sunday.
With 75% of votes counted, Mr Humala has 29.3%, while Ms Fujimori has 22.9%.
Observers from the Organization of American States say no major logistical difficulties affected the election.
'Aids or cancer'
Former Minister of the Economy Pedro Pablo Kuczynski received 21.1%.
Former President Alejandro Toledo is also contesting the election.
Outgoing President Alan Garcia could not stand for a second term and his Apra party did not put forward a candidate.
Peru is enjoying an economic boom and the campaign focused on how to maintain growth while tackling widespread poverty.
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Keiko Fujimori says she wants to continue her father's legacy
Mr Humala, 48, who came second to Mr Garcia in 2006, campaigned on a promise to increase the state's role in the economy and redistribute wealth to Peru's poor majority.
His critics have compared him to Venezuela's left-wing President Hugo Chavez, but he has emphasised links with Brazil's governing Workers' Party.
Keiko Fujimori, 35, appealed to voters who still admire her father, president for a decade from 1990. He is now serving a 25-year jail sentence for corruption and organising death squads.
She has defended his record, saying by taming hyper-inflation and defeating Marxist Shining Path rebels, he laid the basis for Peru's current economic boom.
The prospect of a run-off between Mr Humala and Ms Fujimori has worried some Peruvians, including the Nobel Prize-winning author Mario Vargas Llosa, who has said it would be like "choosing between Aids and cancer".
Mr Vargas Llosa is an outspoken critic of left-wing politics and himself stood for president in 1990 only to be defeated by Alberto Fujimori.
On the eve of the election, Apra gave its support to Mr Kuczynski, 72.
- Published1 June 2011
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